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England and Wales High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions >> Guest Supplies International Ltd v Ince Gordon Dadds Llp [2022] EWHC 2562 (SCCO) (10 October 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2022/2562.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 2562 (SCCO) |
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SENIOR COURTS COSTS OFFICE
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Guest Supplies International Ltd |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
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Ince Gordon Dadds LLP |
Defendant |
____________________
John Churchill (instructed by Ince Gordon Dadds LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 8 July 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Costs Judge Leonard:
Bill No. |
Date |
Total |
161983 |
14/01/2020 |
£2,730.00 |
162506 |
31/01/2020 |
£10,962.00 |
162591 |
31/01/2020 |
£23,656.80 |
163783 |
29/02/2020 |
£27,015.00 |
165153 |
31/03/2020 |
£34,712.20 |
166143 |
30/04/2020 |
£43,834.20 |
167158 |
29/05/2020 |
£31,801.20 |
168284 |
30/06/2020 |
£30,160.80 |
169396 |
31/07/2020 |
£43,883.20 |
170470 |
29/08/2020 |
£40,128.60 |
171789 |
30/09/2020 |
£40,534.20 |
174146 |
31/10/2020 |
£2,868.00 |
Total |
£332,286.20 |
The Points of Dispute and Replies: Preliminary Point 1
The Points of Dispute and Replies: Preliminary Point 2
The Acknowledgement of Debt
Documentary Evidence
"I do not presently have sufficient information concerning the amount of work we will be required to do in this regard. Once we have a better understanding of this I will be able to provide you with an estimate. Pending any such estimate, our charges will be calculated on the number of hours spent by the relevant fee earner multiplies by the fee earners' applicable hourly rate."
"The court may make a costs management order requiring you to complete each stage of the litigation process in accordance with an approved budget. Any costs incurred in excess of the approved budget are unlikely to be recoverable from the other party or parties even if you are successful in the litigation and the excess costs were proportionate to the matters in issue and reasonably incurred. We will keep track of the costs incurred and, if necessary, apply to the Court for an increase in the approved budget but there is no guarantee that the Court will grant such an application. ln any event you will remain liable for the total of the fees incurred with us."
"We shall seek your prior written approval before we engage third parties and incur their charges as agent on your behalf. We shall obtain a fee estimate for any such charges in advance, and keep charges under review. We shall disclose to you any arrangements or payments (if any) that we obtain as a result of such instruction. We shall have no liability to you for the services provided by any third party provider engaged pursuant to this clause or for any other loss arising from the third party services."
"We aim to act at all times in accordance with the SRA Code of Conduct 2011 and other relevant regulatory requirements… We will report to you at appropriate intervals during your matter and on its conclusion. Unless otherwise agreed, we will notify you of all significant telephone conversations and meetings, and make you aware of any significant emails or written correspondence. Where a matter is ongoing, we will report our progress at regular intervals, and regularly update you as to the level of our fees. We will communicate with you by telephone, email or in writing, as appropriate in each instance, or as specifically agreed with you."
"You agree to pay our fees. Unless otherwise specified in the Client Care Letter or otherwise agreed to by us in writing, our fees will be calculated by reference to the current hourly rate of the individual(s) engaged on your matter, recorded and charged for on a task related basis in units of one tenth of an hour. We may adjust the resulting time value to take account of factors such as the complexity, value or urgency of your matter.
The time recorded by all individuals will be charged, including time spent taking instructions; considering, preparing, advising and working on papers; attending meetings with you and/or third parties; attending court; travelling; preparing cost calculations; dealing with correspondence (including emails) to or from you and/or third parties; and making and receiving telephone calls to or from you and/or third parties.
We will provide you with an estimate of our fees at the outset of your matter in the Client Care Letter. We may also provide you with further updated estimates as your matter progresses. If it is impossible to provide a meaningful estimate at the outset of your matter, for example because we do not know in advance how much work may be required, we will give you the best information available at the time, including the rate at which our charges will be incurred, and we will update you as your matter progresses.
Unless we state otherwise in writing, any estimate provided by us as to our fee is only a guide, and is not a quotation or an offer to carry out services at a fixed price…"
"You agree to pay any disbursements which we incur on your behalf. This may include any courier charges, travel expenses, court fees, counsel's fees, expert's fees, witness' fees, costs draftsmen's fees, Companies House fees, local and other search fees, Land Registry fees, stamp duty, charges for foreign currency conversion, and money transmission and other costs.
We may require you to pay, and you agree to pay, any substantial disbursements in advance of such disbursements being incurred on your behalf. This may include court fees, stamp duty, counsel's fees, expert witness' fees, and registration and other official fees.
We are not obliged to incur any disbursements on your behalf."
"We will be entitled to invoice you for our fees, additional charges and disbursements at monthly intervals or earlier when appropriate, unless otherwise agreed with you in writing or specified in the Client Care Letter.
All invoices are payable in full on delivery.
All invoices are payable in full regardless of the outcome of the matter, including whether a matter completes or a claim succeeds.
All invoices are final invoices for the period to which they relate rather than interim invoices, unless otherwise stated. However, as there may be a delay invoicing disbursements incurred on your behalf pending receipt of the relevant invoice from suppliers, our invoices may not be final invoices in relation to disbursements."
"Costs of case…Current balance of fee's from December 19 to March 20 based on what was projected… Where we are in the scheme of the case and the anticipated costs moving forward to conclusion (best and worst case scenarios)… A way of making these anticipated costs work so both sides are happy going forward…"
"AA says he has money but it's a cash-flow issue because of the pandemic (unlikely to be a long term thing). Fine balancing act…
In terms of costs, AA says he asked how much this would cost to take to trial. Apparently PGC said £40-50k to take it to the CCMC. AA says GG was aware that the costs have exceeded that and we are three weeks away from the CCMC. AA thinks the costs are, to the end of March, £100k and wants an agreement for fees to take this to trial, as there is not an open chequebook.
PGC doesn't recall the conversation but says that the he (sic) gave the figure to the CCMC but that has been adjourned since then. We have also had discreet issues to deal with which have increased costs. AA says this is about winning financially and also making a point where he was wronged….
AA says he doesn't want to be a nuisance and wants us to work together and wants us to win for him.
There is £64k outstanding. AA is going to make another goodwill payment today but, moving forward, the cash-flow is zero but he doesn't want that to mean the case stops. AA wants an arrangement whereby he can pay when the business starts again. PGC suggests £20k/month to pay the outstanding debt. AA doesn't seem impressed with the offer of making such a monthly payment. AA is going to make a £15k goodwill payment today.
GG suggests him and AA take it offline and go through the cash-flows. VXS points out that GG has the budget, which shows £200k to take this to trial from here.
Discussion from AND if AA wants to walk away, PGC says that AA has been put forward as a funder by his former solicitor."
"You ask me why me the % chances of your success are going down. The frank answer is that I hadn't factored in your constantly undermining your own case…
I would appreciate it if you could do what we have asked for which is to respond to the R FI not constantly prejudice your own case by taking steps we haven't asked for and have positively advised against."
"Using my actions as a way of explaining away the 300% increase in costs budgeted is a bit of a cheap (but clever) shot which we will come to in due course when we look at a breakdown your invoices in accordance to the statements made in your last 2 emails re my actions being the cause of the escalated costs."
"We need to resolve the issue of our fees and your representation. Can I suggest we discuss this at 3.00 today? If this is convenient, we can circulate a dial in so that George can also participate if he is interested."
"Thank you for sending us £10K on account. When we spoke with Andrew Andronikou, we understood from him you were sending us £20K on account, but you now appear to be counting the previous £10K as part of that £20K., which it is not. The £10K that you kindly
sent us previously was used to clear the money owed to counsel, but once we deliver his brief, which we need to do very urgently, as you know, we will owe him another £12.5K + VAT (£17,760.00). We may be able to negotiate counsel down to £11.5K + VAT, but that's still £13,800.00, so we would still have insufficient fuds to pay counsel, let alone anything to reduce your indebtedness to us, which stands at £94,711.40 without taking account of the June wi.p.
Furthermore, it was apparent from our conversations last week and the link you sent me to the case provided to you by Fahri & Co., that your game-plan is to reward our generosity in continuing to act for you despite the unpaid nature of your account by mounting a fee dispute as and when we arrive at a point where we are not willing to provide you with any further credit. With this in mind, I attach an Acknowledgement of Debt which I must ask you to sign and return, because I am not willing to allow you to both take the credit and purport to reserve to yourself some future right to argue about the fees. The agreement is dated 19 June because that is when I understood you were originally supposed to meet or talk with Andrew, but the meeting was put back several times and, I believe, eventually downgraded to a 'phone call this morning.
Assuming we can talk counsel down to £11.5K + VAT, if you would send the remaining£10K., that will leave £6.2K left over to apply towards the historic £94.7K odd, which is a drop in the ocean, especially as there is already over £16K w.i.p since those figures were
prepared.
I would therefore be obliged if you would sign the Acknowledgment of Debt and transfer the remaining £10K by return.."
"If I'm reading your email correct...your trying to take away any right I have to question my fees questioned? Is that correct?
For the record I sent £10k today that I really broke my neck to get, to get this response is nothing short of a disgrace."
"Andrew communicated to me the terms of a deal he said he'd brokered on your behalf this morning, which I said was fine with me.
The terms were
1 . £6K TT'd to us straight away;
2. The Acknowledgment of Debt signed and sent to us straight away; scanned copy is fine;
3. Your £15K personal cheque in favour of Ince Gordon Dadds LLP to be post-dated a fortnight and handed to George today;
4. We do the hearing
5. Regular monthly payments from you, but the line went bad so I didn't catch the figure of the monthly payments
I have now been waiting 4 hours for you to perform the agreement. In half an hour's time your barrister is taking on another case as we couldn't keep him hanging on any longer. If you sort this out in the next 30 minutes, we can keep him. Otherwise we have to reinvent the
wheel with another barrister.."
"As you have me over the proverbial barrow as it were, I have little option but to bow to all your
requests.
- £6,000,00 further payment will be made today
- Acknowledgement of debt doc that you prepared will be signed and email over with just the agreed addition of my statutory rights not being affected.
- £15,000,00 post-dated personal cheque will be ready for George to collect this evening
I think I've made my feelings in this matter very clear, I've been given no realistic alternative to contest any of your demands, I do not agree about the way this has all come about but we are where we are."
"Please see attached signed Acknowledgement of Debt Letter for which I am sending without prejudice top any of my statutory rights."
"In consideration of your firm granting time and forbearance to pay and continuing to represent GUEST SUPPLIES INT'L LIMITED in the above litigation and advise us on matters ancillary to that litigation, we acknowledge our indebtedness to you as at 31 May 2020 in the sum of £94,711.40 (after giving credit for our recent payment on account in the sum of £10,000.00) and agree to make an immediate further payment in reduction of that indebtedness in the sum of £20,000.00. Further, we understand that your current work in progress for the month of June to date is in the sum of £16,524.00..."
"We need to resolve the issue of our fees and your representation. Can I suggest we discuss this at 3.00 today? If this is convenient, we can circulate a dial in so that George can also participate if he is interested."
"We need to resolve the issue of our fees and your representation. Can I suggest we discuss this at 3.00 today? If this is convenient, we can circulate a dial in so that George can also participate if he is interested."
Mr Aristodemou's Witness Evidence
"Insofar as the costs up to and including the CCMC of 17th May 2020 are concerned, as well as the costs being excessive based on the fact of reliance placed upon the verbal estimate provided and subsequent failure to provide estimates, costs up to 17th May 2020 should not exceed £50,000 plus VAT howsoever incurred. Further, as the Post Budget Costs are concerned, and Invoices Post 31st May 2020 should be restricted to a reasonable sum reflecting the lack of fee estimates provided after that date and in accordance with the Points of Dispute and considering issues of Professional Negligence if the costs are to be assessed which are yet to be determined less the payments on account."
Accountant Mr Georgiou's Witness Evidence
Mr Cohen's Witness Evidence
Mr Georgiou's (Solicitor) Witness Evidence
The Principles
(3) Subject to paragraph (2), costs are to be assessed on the indemnity basis but are to be presumed –
(a) to have been reasonably incurred if they were incurred with the express or implied approval of the client;
(b) to be reasonable in amount if their amount was expressly or impliedly approved by the client;
(c) to have been unreasonably incurred if –
(i) they are of an unusual nature or amount; and
the (ii) the solicitor did not tell the client that as a result the costs might not be recovered from the other party."
"Section 74(3) of the Solicitors Act 1974 applies unless the solicitor and client have entered into a written agreement which expressly permits payment to the solicitor of an amount of costs greater than that which the client could have recovered from another party to the proceedings".
"This chapter is about providing a proper standard of service, which takes into account the individual needs and circumstances of each client. This includes providing clients with the information they need to make informed decisions about the services they need, how these will be delivered and how much they will cost."
"clients are in a position to make informed decisions about the services they need, how their matter will be handled and the options available to them..."
and 1.13:
"clients receive the best possible information, both at the time of engagement and when appropriate as their matter progresses, about the likely overall cost of their matter…"
"Where there is simply no estimate at all for the costs in dispute, then the guidance that I would give is that… the costs judge should consider whether and if so to what extent the costs claimed would have been significantly lower if there had been an estimate given at the time when it should have been given. If the situation is that an estimate was given, but not updated, the first part of the guidance given in Leigh v Michelin Tyre plc [2004] 1 WLR 846 can be applied here. The guidance was as follows, at para 26:
'First, the estimates made by solicitors of the overall likely costs of the litigation should usually provide a useful yardstick by which the reasonableness of the costs finally claimed may be measured. If there is a substantial difference between the estimated costs and the costs claimed, that difference calls for an explanation. In the absence of a satisfactory explanation, the court may conclude that the difference itself is evidence from which it can conclude that the costs claimed are unreasonable.'
However, the above guidance is at a very general level. Like the court in the Leigh case, I would stress that the guidance given above is not exhaustive since it is impossible to foresee all the differing circumstances that might arise in any individual assessment."
"What remedy would Mastercigars have if the promise to update the estimates was not complied with? The obvious remedy would be a claim to damages. Such a claim would require the client to prove on the balance of probabilities that it would have been in a better position if an estimate had been provided. That would be quite a difficult thing for a client to prove. The promise to update estimates was not, in my judgment, a condition precedent to Withers recovering any sum in addition to the sums set out in the estimates which had been provided."
"In a case where a solicitor does not give his client an estimate, the result will not generally follow that the solicitor is unable to recover any costs from his client. In a case where a solicitor does give his client an estimate but the costs subsequently claimed exceed the estimate, it will not follow in every case that the solicitor will be restricted to recovering the sum in the estimate. What these two decisions of the Court of Appeal repeatedly state is that the court may "have regard to" the estimate or may "take into account" the estimate and the estimate is a "factor" in assessing reasonableness. For the reasons given by Arden LJ in Garbutt's case at para 50, these two cases do not themselves provide very much detailed guidance as to how one should react on the facts of a particular case because it was felt by the Court of Appeal it was impossible to foresee all the differing circumstances that might arise in any individual assessment".
"Solicitors are entitled to reasonable remuneration for their services: see s 15 of the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982. In considering what is reasonable remuneration, the court will want to know why particular items of work were carried out and ask whether it was reasonable for the solicitors to do that work and for the client to be expected to pay for it…
… (Wong v Vizards [1997] 2 Costs LR 46) …is an authority at first instance, prior to Leigh v Michelin Tyre plc, of a case where there was reliance by a client on his own solicitor's estimate. The judge in that case… indicated that 'regard should be had' to the level of costs the client had been led to believe he would have to pay. The question was then expressed as to whether it was reasonable for the client to pay much more than the estimated costs. In my judgment, the proper response to this decision is to hold that the court in that case was finding that, for the purpose of assessing reasonable remuneration payable to the solicitor, it is relevant as a matter of law to ask: 'what in all the circumstances it is reasonable for the client to be expected to pay?' Thus, even if the solicitor has spent a reasonable time on reasonable items of work and the charging rate is reasonable, the resulting figure may exceed what it is reasonable in all the circumstances to expect the client to pay, and to the extent that the figure does exceed what is reasonable to expect the client to pay, the excess is not recoverable."
"The first aspect is the contention that Withers were retained to do the work in the estimate and no other work. If Withers did other work then it was outside the retainer and they were not entitled to be paid for it. A second aspect is the contention that the client only agreed to pay the costs in the estimate and was not liable to pay anything beyond the estimate unless it was asked to, and expressly agreed, to do so. I reject both these contentions. As to the second, it is clear from Withers' standard terms of business that the estimate was not placing an upper limit on costs and much less was it placing a definition on the work required of Withers. As regards the first contention, I hold that the estimate did not define the extent of the work to be done. Withers were instructed to do what was reasonably necessary on behalf of the client in the litigation as it evolved…"
"…my formulation of what is required does not go so far as to require the client to prove on the balance of probabilities that he would have acted differently…the way in which the estimate should be reflected on the costs concerned was left to the good sense of the court… it is not necessary for the client to prove detriment in the sense of showing on the balance of probabilities that it would have acted in a different way, which would have turned out more advantageous to the client. In a case where the client satisfies the court that the inaccurate estimate deprived the client of an opportunity of acting differently, that is a relevant matter which can be assessed by the court when determining the regard which should be had to the estimate when assessing costs. Of course, if a client does prove the fact of detriment, and in particular substantial detriment, that will weigh more heavily with the court as compared with the case where the client contends that the inaccurate estimate deprived the client of an opportunity to act differently and where the matter is wholly speculative as to how the client might have acted...
…The court should consider the deductions which are needed in order to do justice between the parties. It is not the proper function of the court to punish the solicitor for providing a wrong estimate or for failing to keep it up to date as events unfolded. In terms of the sequence of the decisions to be made by the court, it has been suggested that the court should determine whether, and if so how, it will reflect the estimate in the detailed assessment before carrying out the detailed assessment. The suggestion as to the sequence of decision making may not always be appropriate. The suggestion is put forward as practical guidance rather than as a legal imperative. The ultimate question is as to the sum which it is reasonable for the client to pay, having regard to the estimate and any other relevant matter."
The Acknowledgement of Debt
The Figure Discussed on 21 November 2019: the Evidence
Whether an Estimate was Given on 21 November 2019
The Effect of an Estimate of Costs to the CCMC
What Estimate Should Have Been Given, When, and the Likely Effect
Post-Budget Costs
Conclusions on Preliminary Point 2
Summary of Conclusions